DAVID CAMERON: The EU referendum is bigger than a general election

The EU referendum on June 23 "is more important than a
general election," Prime Minister David Cameron said on
Sunday

If voters don't like a government they can kick them out
after five years but reversing a decision to leave the EU
would be "very very difficult," Cameron said.

He said the shock to the economy of a Brexit would be
severe.

Leaving the European Union could add £220 a year onto each
household's food bill, said in an interviewwith ITV's Robert
Peston.

Cameron said that supermarket bosses warned "prices would go up
if we left the EU because there'd be a shock to the economy, the
pound would fall, and that would mean the prices we pay in this
economy would be higher, particularly for food because we import
so much."

"Is it worth taking this risk? I, as Prime Minister of this
country, absolutely believe it is not worth the risk of taking
this step," Cameron said.

Singh, the polling analyst behind Number Cruncher Politics (NCP),
said in his latest blog post that while some of the
results of polls published this week have been dramatically varied, they don't change the
overall picture of Remain being the most likely victors.

In fact, according to his updated forecast, the probability of
Britain voting to leave the EU is just 19.6%.

Cameron also criticized remarks on banning Muslims from the
US made by Republican Presidential Candidate Donald Trump,
calling them "wrong and divisive" as well as "dangerous."